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Politics in Dark Times

Politics in Dark Times

Politics in Dark Times

Encounters with Hannah Arendt
Seyla Benhabib, Yale University
December 2010
Available
Paperback
9780521127226

    This outstanding collection of essays explores Hannah Arendt's thought against the background of recent world-political events unfolding since September 11, 2001, and engages in a contentious dialogue with one of the greatest political thinkers of the past century, with the conviction that she remains one of our contemporaries. Themes such as moral and political equality, action, judgment and freedom are re-evaluated with fresh insights by a group of thinkers who are themselves well known for their original contributions to political thought. Other essays focus on novel and little-discussed themes in the literature by highlighting Arendt's views of sovereignty, international law and genocide, nuclear weapons and revolutions, imperialism and Eurocentrism, and her contrasting images of Europe and America. Each essay displays not only superb Arendt scholarship but also stylistic flair and analytical tenacity.

    • High quality of contributions in terms of scholarship and style
    • Focuses on rarely explored themes of Arendt's work
    • Originality of the themes discussed

    Product details

    December 2010
    Paperback
    9780521127226
    408 pages
    235 × 156 × 20 mm
    0.58kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Introduction Seyla Benhabib
    • Part I. Freedom, Equality, and Responsibility:
    • 2. Arendt on the foundations of equality Jeremy Waldron
    • 3. Arendt's Augustine Roy T. Tsao
    • 4. The rule of the people: Arendt, archê, and democracy Patchen Markell
    • 5. Genealogies of catastrophe: Arendt on the logic and legacy of imperialism Karuna Mantena
    • 6. On race and culture: Hannah Arendt and her contemporaries Richard H. King
    • Part II. Sovereignty, the Nation-State and the Rule of Law:
    • 7. Banishing the sovereign? Internal and external sovereignty in Arendt Andrew Arato and Jean Cohen
    • 8. The decline of order: Hannah Arendt and the paradoxes of the nation-state Christian Volk
    • 9. The Eichmann trial and the legacy of jurisdiction Leora Bilsky
    • 10. International law and human plurality in the shadow of totalitarianism: Hannah Arendt and Raphael Lemkin Seyla Benhabib
    • Part III. Politics in Dark Times:
    • 11. In search of a miracle: Hannah Arendt and the atomic bomb Jonathan Schell
    • 12. Hannah Arendt between Europe and America: optimism in dark times Benjamin R. Barber
    • 13. Keeping the republic: reading Arendt's On Revolution after the fall of the Berlin Wall Dick Howard
    • Part IV. Judging Evil:
    • 14. Are Arendt's reflections on evil still relevant? Richard Bernstein
    • 15. Banality reconsidered Susan Neiman
    • 16. The elusiveness of Arendtian judgment Bryan Garsten
    • 17. Existential values in Arendt's treatment of evil and morality George Kateb.
      Contributors
    • Seyla Benhabib, Jeremy Waldron, Roy T. Tsao, Patchen Markell, Karuna Mantena, Richard H. King, Andrew Arato, Jean Cohen, Christian Volk, Leora Bilsky, Jonathan Schell, Benjamin R. Barber, Dick Howard, Richard Bernstein, Susan Neiman, Bryan Garsten, George Kateb

    • Editor
    • Seyla Benhabib , Yale University

      Seyla Benhabib is the Eugene Meyer Professor of Political Science and Philosophy at Yale University. She is the author of Critique, Norm and Utopia: A Study of the Normative Foundations of Critical Theory; Situating the Self: Gender, Community and Postmodernism in Contemporary Ethics; Feminism as Critique (coauthored with Judith Butler, Drucilla Cornell, and Nancy Fraser); The Reluctant Modernism of Hannah Arendt; The Claims of Culture: Equality and Diversity in the Global Era; The Rights of Others: Aliens, Citizens and Residents; and Another Cosmopolitanism: Hospitality, Sovereignty and Democratic Iterations. Her work has been translated into 14 languages, and she was the recipient of the 2009 Ernst Bloch Prize.